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Showing 29 results for Ebrahim

Ebrahim Jaafari Pooyan, Riaz Alaei Kalajahi, Farhad Habibi, Shiva Toloui Rakhshan,
Volume 20, Issue 1 (5-2021)
Abstract



Ebrahim Jaafaripooyan, Batoul Ahmadi, Baheshte Ebrahimi,
Volume 20, Issue 3 (12-2021)
Abstract

 Background and Aim: Expenditure in the health sector requires appropriate resources management. This study was conducted to determine the amount of moral hazards associated with the service providers in the medication prescriptions paid by an insurance organization.
Methods: Study population included paid pharmaceutical documents in Tehran province in 2019. 2000 prescriptions for 500 insured people were randomly selected from the database of the organization. Two indicators (the number of suspicious prescriptions based on the incompatibility of a drug with the history of the disease or the drug spectrum of an insured and the number of prescriptions with a financial burden higher than the average usual burden of a normal patient) were matched with transcript data and analyzed with SPSS version 24. An experienced pharmacist was consulted to examine the drug spectrum of all prescriptions.
Results: 5.4% of total prescriptions were incompatible drugs and 6.4% had created extra financial burden. The highest incidence of risks by speciality was related to general practitioners (16 % with a surplus financial burden of 87/500/000 Rials). The highest number and amount of risks in Rials per insured group was related to supervisors (63 % with a surplus financial burden of 26/000/000 Rials). The risk in the military centres’ prescriptions were more than private and governmental centres and it was relatively equal in contracted (48%) and non-contracted (52%) centres.
Conclusion: The abuse in the health service provision is a high risk for  health care managers  in countries that have health insurance programs which their intelligent tracking reduces many of the insurers’ costs and prevent the shortage of vital medicines.
Bahareh Hashemi Moghaddam, Mohammad Reza Karimi Alavije, Najima Sadat Kianoosh Fard, Shahin Ebrahimbabaei,
Volume 20, Issue 4 (12-2021)
Abstract

   Introduction: The concept of patient satisfaction has become very important in the field of healthcare and the major part of this satisfaction is affected by the quality and variety of hospital hotel services.
The main purpose of this study is to analyzing the effect of quality of non-medical services (hoteling) of hospitals on satisfaction considering the mediating role of satisfaction with health services in Shahid Fayyaz Bakhsh, Shahid Hasheminejad and Masih Daneshvari hospitals.
Method: The type of this study is of applied and descriptive-correlational. The statistical population of this study included 48043 recipients of services in the mentioned hospitals. The sampling method is simple relative random judgment and Krejcie and Morgan table was used to determine the sample size.  information collected through a researcher-made questionnaire. In order to analyze the data and test the hypotheses from descriptive and inferential statistics through SPSS22 software and also to check the model fit and confirmatory factor analysis from Lee software. Shannon entropy method was used to measure the importance and weight of the studied variables.
Results: The weight and priority of each of the research variables implied that the views of service recipients in the field of non-medical services of hospitals, services during treatment, cleaning services, welfare services, human resources, buildings and facilities, and patient nutrition were respectively high to low priorities.
Conclusion: Recipients satisfaction of non-medical services was average. Establishing partnership management system and determining their medical priorities and needs might increase their satisfaction .

Hojjat Rahmani, Marzieh Rajaeian, Ebrahim Jaafaripooyan, Mirsaeed Yekaninejad,
Volume 21, Issue 2 (9-2022)
Abstract

Background: Human resources determine the quality of performance of health care organizations and are one of their most important competitive advantages. Also, committing is very important to perform their duties. Therefore, it is necessary to recognize the factors that affect organizational commitment. This study aimed to investigate how organizational transparency could affect organizational trust and commitment from the perspective of hospital staff.
Materials & Methods: The present study is an applied descriptive-analytical study conducted on 640 staff members in teaching hospitals affiliated to Tehran University of Medical Sciences. The instruments used were: Organizational Transparency and Trust developed by Rawlins (2008) and  Organizational Commitment developed by Meyer and Allen (1997). Data were analyzed using SPSS software version 26 and AMOS.
Results: Organizational transparency dimensions (overall transparency, participation, substantial information, and accountability) had a positive indirect effect on organizational commitment dimensions (affective, continuance, and normative commitment). Additionally, secrecy has a negative indirect effect on organizational commitment dimensions. The relationship between organizational transparency and commitment was also statistically significant, which indicates that organizational trust mediated the relationship between organizational transparency and commitment.
Conclusion: Managers might be able to improve transparency and staff participation in decision-making by taking cognizance of the priorities and information that can be disseminated by hospitals. In fact, increasing organizational transparency expands cooperation and leads to enhancing staff’s organizational trust, and ultimately increases their organizational commitment.


Ebrahim Jafari Pouyan, Maryam Babaei Aghbolagh, Farnoosh Azizi, Aida Asghari,
Volume 21, Issue 3 (12-2022)
Abstract

Management is a key pillar in order to achieve the goals of health systems. An efficient structure for identifying, recruiting, training, promoting, monitoring and evaluating the performance of managers is highly likely to help the specialization of management, prevent non-specialized selection processes and possible deviations. Given the managerial level in which they play a role, health managers ought to have the required competencies and characteristics. The leading countries generally thrive to have structures where proper candidates are systematically placed in the position of management and promoted to the higher positions. Therefore, the experiences of these countries should be solicited in line with the local social, political, economic and cultural factors in order to achieve the health system goals.
Moslem Sharifi, Jalal Saeidpour, Mohammad Javad Kabir, Abdollah Poursamad, Mehdi Ebrahimi, Bahman Khosravi,
Volume 22, Issue 1 (5-2023)
Abstract

Background and purpose: With the establishment of a comprehensive health information system (SIB system) in the health department of Iran's health system, one of the important programs of this country to improve health care through the integration of health information was keyed. This study analyzed the performance of this program from the point of view of the end users of the system in the health centers of Boyar Ahmad city.
Materials and Methods: This study was a qualitative research that was conducted using semi-structured interviews and focus group meetings with 25 system users, support officials and staff experts at different levels, reviewing relevant documents and also observing users' performance. The snowball sampling method was carried out in a targeted and networked manner. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze the data. MAXQDA10 software was used to record, organize and manage study data after collection.
Results: The findings of this study showed that the deployment of this system from the users' point of view contains many positive and negative points, which can be categorized in five general axes, data management system, caregivers' performance, care management, quality of care and infrastructure. The most important challenges of the system included technical inefficiencies, operational inefficiencies, the challenge of statistics and reporting, and technical and social infrastructure, and the most important benefits were improving the quality of care, tracking and reporting, facilitating the care process, and improving the performance of caregivers.
Conclusion: From the point of view of users, the Sib system can be considered as a positive experience in improving the quality of health care, but due to the existence of many challenges, it is far from its final goals
Ebrahim Hasanzadeh, Hasan Aboulghasem Gorji, Aziz Rezapour, Mani Yousef Vand,
Volume 22, Issue 2 (9-2023)
Abstract

Background and purpose: Supplementary health insurance plays a pivotal role in the health economy and individual payments, enhancing access to health services and improving individual quality of life. This study aims to explore the challenges and strategies for developing supplementary health insurance.
Methods: This systematic review examined research related to the challenges and strategies for the development of supplementary health insurance in various countries, focusing on articles published in the last five years in both domestic and international databases. For each article, a data extraction form was completed, and the data were subsequently classified, summarized, and analyzed.
Results: Seventeen articles met the study's inclusion and exclusion criteria and were analyzed. The main challenges and strategies for developing supplementary health insurance were identified across seven primary themes: premium and financing, electronic infrastructure, quality improvement, moral hazards and adverse selection, cost-effectiveness and efficiency, evidence-based decision-making, and effective awareness and advertising.
Conclusion: Considering the numerous identified challenges and barriers in the development of supplementary health insurance, it is recommended to focus on creating electronic infrastructures and necessary platforms to enhance and develop policies in supplementary health insurance, particularly in the dimensions of service packages, cost-effectiveness, and efficiency

Mohammad Heydaryan Manesh, Aida Asghary, Ebrahim Jaafaripooyan,
Volume 22, Issue 3 (12-2023)
Abstract

The provision of virtual health care has currently received ample attention from health systems worldwide, due to the recent conditions and events. Many countries are trying to provide their preliminary visits and a relatively wide range of other care virtually, paving the way towards the introduction of virtual clinics. However, in many countries, this concept has not been clearly defined, and the characteristics that are necessary to use the virtual clinics are still unknown. This perspective has sought to explain the concept of virtual clinics and their characteristics with a brief review of related literature.
Seyed Rahim Safavi Mirmahalleh, Mohammad Rahim Ramazanian, Mahmoud Moradi, Mostafa Ebrahimpour Azbari,
Volume 22, Issue 4 (1-2024)
Abstract

Background and Purpose: Health status is undeniably one of the most critical indicators of social development and progress. Providing healthcare poses a significant challenge for human life, and managing the healthcare supply chain is of strategic importance. The aim of this research is to analyze and compare the results of meta-synthesis with thematic analysis in identifying the risks of the pharmaceutical industry's supply chain.
Methods: This research follows a qualitative approach, utilizing both meta-synthesis and thematic analysis to identify supply chain risks in the pharmaceutical industry. In the first step, a meta-synthesis and systematic review of related studies over the past twenty-three years were conducted, identifying one hundred articles, which were refined to twenty-six key articles for the research. In the next step, risks specific to Iran's pharmaceutical supply chain were identified through thematic analysis and semi-structured interviews with experts, using targeted sampling. Finally, the results from these two approaches were compared and analyzed.
Results: The meta-synthesis approach identified ten general supply chain risks in the global pharmaceutical industry. Similarly, the thematic analysis approach identified ten specific supply chain risks in Iran's pharmaceutical industry. Six risks were common to both approaches: low quality of raw materials, complexity and incompatibility of information systems, supply of foreign currency and financial payments, transportation and insurance issues, increase in the price of raw materials, and unavailability of medicines. These common risks are critical for both the global and Iranian pharmaceutical supply chains.
Conclusion: Stakeholders in Iran's pharmaceutical supply chain (including hospitals) should prioritize managing these six common risks to improve supply chain performance. Additionally, they should focus on the four unique risks identified through thematic analysis specific to Iran's pharmaceutical supply chain, applying appropriate control measures and activities.

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